July 31, 2009

A Big Rally In A Bear Market

This signal says buy stocks, but it's not a long-term bull market.




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Source:

Eric Martin and Michael Patterson. Dow Sends Buy Signal That’s Worked Since 1921.
Bloomberg. July 29, 2009.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aCbacdLSWjCs

Mark Hurlbert. Secular bear, cyclical bull.
Marketwatch. July 30, 2009.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/is-the-bull-market-cyclical-or-secular-2009-07-30

© 2009 Michael Cale

July 28, 2009

Housing's Very Thin Silver Lining

There were plenty of market commentators that were giddy about yesterday's monthly rise in new home sales. If that is a silver lining, it's still a very dark cloud.

From the August Harpers Index:
Chances that a US home purchase in the first quarter was a foreclosure or short sale: 1 in 2.
But that was in Q1 and the new home results were from June. Yes, but then we have this quote from The Big Picture:
National New Home Sales, on a monthly basis, don’t even add up to half of the total foreclosure activity in California alone in a single month.
-Mark M Hanson

One other (unrelated) tidbit from the Index that caught my eye:
Estimated percent of all existing blogs that have not been updated in 4 months 94%

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Source:

Harpers Index.
Harpers Magazine August 2009.

Barry Ritholtz. Real Estate Quote of the Day.
The Big Picture. July 27, 2009.
http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2009/07/real-estate-quote-of-the-day/


© 2009 Michael Cale

July 26, 2009

How's the Market P/E? About 700, For Now

As of this week's close, with about half of the earnings in for the S&P 500, the market P/E ratio is a whopping 771, compared with a long-term average of about 16.





That's based on the Q2 earnings estimate of $7.27 per share.

The forecast is for the P/E ratio to drop to negative 970 in Q3, then to rise to 33 by the end of the year.

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Source:
Standard and Poors.
http://www2.standardandpoors.com/spf/xls/index/SP500EPSEST.XLS Excel link.


© 2009 Michael Cale

July 25, 2009

California Job Losses

The Sacramento Bee has an interactive on California job losses.



As of the June data, the official unemployment rate in California was 11.6% compared with 9.5% for the U.S. as a whole.

There are five states with higher unemployment rates than California:

Michigan 15.2%
Nevada 12%
Rhode Island 12.4%
South Carolina 12.1%
Oregon 12.2%

The states with the lowest unemployment rates are: North Dakota 4.2%, Nebraska 5.0%, South Dakota 5.1%, Utah 5.7%.


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Sources:

Staff. California's Wave of Lost Jobs
Sacramento Bee. July 13, 2009.
http://www.sacbee.com/1232/rich_media/2022115.html


Bureau of Labor Statistics. Regional and State Employment and Unemployment Summary
Press Release. July 17, 2009.
http://www.bls.gov/news.release/laus.nr0.htm



© 2009 Michael Cale

July 23, 2009

Too Much Hope Priced In The S&P 500

In this morning's note from Gluskin Sheff, David Rosenberg sees a sputtering stock market for the rest of 2009 .
Well, the S&P 500 surged 15% in the second quarter and what we did was go back in the history books to see what happens to the economy the very next quarterly typically after such a big bounce and the answer is … just over 3% real GDP growth. So consider that de facto what is being discounted at this time for current quarter growth — it better be a humdinger of an inventory build. Now, for the market to build on such a rapid advance in the current quarter, history again suggests that we would need to see 5½% real GDP growth, which we give near-zero odds of occurring. Hence our call for a sputtering stock market through year-end. Too much growth — and hope — is priced in at this point.

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Source:
David Rosenberg. Breakfast with Dave.
Gluskin Sheff. July 23, 2009.
http://www.gluskinsheff.com


© 2009 Michael Cale

July 21, 2009

How High Can Government Debt Go?

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard outlines the sad state of affairs in Ireland. The bankrupt government can only borrow at exorbinant interest rates, so it is drastically cutting spending in an effort to balance the budget.

To accomplish this, the government is closing schools, laying off teachers, reducing police pay, firing bureaucrats by the thousands, cancelling child welfare benefits, etc. This is a country where unemployment is already at 12% and climbing.

Ireland is not the only nation with a government in dire financial straits.
But the deeper truth is that Britain, Spain, France, Germany, Italy, the US, and Japan are in varying states of fiscal ruin, and those tipping into demographic decline (unlike young Ireland) have an underlying cancer that is even more deadly. The West cannot support its gold-plated state structures from an aging workforce and depleted tax base.

While I agree with Nomura's Richard Koo that the US, Britain, and Europe risk a deflationary slump along the lines of Japan's Lost Decade (two decades really), I am ever more wary of his calls for Keynesian spending a l'outrance.
Such policies have crippled Japan. A string of make-work stimulus plans - famously building bridges to nowhere in Hokkaido - has ensured that the day of reckoning will be worse, when it comes. The IMF says Japan's gross public debt will reach 240pc of GDP by 2014 - beyond the point of recovery for a nation with a contracting workforce. Sooner or later, Japan's bond market will blow up.
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Source:
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard. Fiscal ruin of the Western world beckons.
Telegraph. July 18, 2009.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/5857074/Fiscal-ruin-of-the-Western-world-beckons.html


© 2009 Michael Cale

July 16, 2009

Biden: More Spending Necessary to Prevent Bankruptcy

Vice President Biden spoke on the dire need for the government to pass health care reform in order to prevent the nation from going bankrupt.

Biden speaking:
We're going to go bankrupt as a nation. Now when I say that, people look at me and say 'what are you talkin' about Joe? You're telling me we gotta go spend money to keep from going bankrupt?' The answer is 'Yes' and I'm tellin' ya.
Hear the audio.

The Washington Post and the Alexandria Times both covered the story, but didn't mention this comment.

With logic like that, it's plain to see why the Vice President hasn't based his livelihood in the field of commerce.


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Source:
Penny Starr. Joe Biden: ‘We Have to Go Spend Money to Keep From Going Bankrupt’.
CNSNews. July 16, 2009.
http://www.cnsnews.com/public/content/article.aspx?RsrcID=51162


© 2009 Michael Cale

July 13, 2009

Sovereign Default Risk Is Perennial

The risk of sovereign default is probably the highest since the aftermath of the Great Depression.

Carmen Reinhart from the University of Maryland and Kenneth Rogoff from Harvard University looked at about 800 years of financial crises around the globe.

What they found is that countries default on their debt with great regularity. It's highly cyclical.

Economists and policy-makers have a fantasy that governments learn from past mistakes and are unlikely to repeat them. The opposite is true. They do not learn from past mistakes, they rationalize them away and repeat the mistakes of the past with great regularity.



This brings us to our central theme—the “this time is different syndrome.” There is a view today that both countries and creditors have learned from their mistakes. Thanks to better-informed macroeconomic policies and more discriminating lending practices, it is argued, the world is not likely to again see a major wave of defaults. Indeed, an often-cited reason these days why “this time it’s different” for the emerging markets is that governments there are relying more on domestic debt financing.

Such celebration may be premature. Capital flow/default cycles have been around since at least 1800—if not before. Technology has changed, the height of humans has changed, and fashions have changed. Yet the ability of governments and investors to delude themselves, giving rise to periodic bouts of euphoria that usually end in tears, seems to have remained a constant.

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Source:
Carmen M. Reinhart, Kenneth S. Rogoff. This Time is Different: A Panoramic View of Eight Centuries of Financial Crises.
April 16, 2008.
http://www.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/rogoff/files/This_Time_Is_Different.pdf


© 2009 Michael Cale

July 12, 2009

Issued For Payment of Debt in California


California has begun issuing Confederate dollars registered warrants, or IOUs, in place of cash, since, well, they spent all their cash last year and they don't have any more.

This month, the state will spend about $13.8 billion. About $2.9 billion of those payments will be in IOUs.

If you paid your state income taxes in dollars, which is required by the state, well you're going to get any refund in IOUs. Don't worry though, the state legislators that created this mess will still be paid in cash.

It will be interesting to see if anyone (else) is going to bring this up:
No State shall enter into any Treaty, Alliance, or Confederation; grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal; coin Money; emit Bills of Credit; make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts
That's from Article I Section 10 of the U.S. Constitution.

So far, most banks are refusing to play ball.

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Source:
California State Controller's Office.State Controller's Office Information on July 2009 Registered Warrants (IOUs).
July 11, 2009.
http://www.sco.ca.gov/eo_news_registeredwarrants.html


Dale KaslerMost banks hold firm, refuse to cash state's IOUs
Sacramento Bee. July 11, 2009.
http://www.sacbee.com/budget/story/2017828-p2.html

© 2009 Michael Cale

July 11, 2009

Things Your Stockbroker Won't Tell You - Part II

In another blow to the dogma of stocks-for-the-long-run investing, it now turns out that their assumptions may be based on faulty data.
As of June 30, U.S. stocks have underperformed long-term Treasury bonds for the past five, 10, 15, 20 and 25 years.

Still, brokers and financial planners keep reminding us, there's almost never been a 30-year period since 1802 when stocks have underperformed bonds.
Yet the data before 1870 has several problems, the major one being that it excludes about 97% of stocks that traded during the early years.

For more see Does Stock-Market Data Really Go Back 200 Years?

Previously - Things Your Stockbroker Won't Tell You

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Source:
Jason Zweig. Does Stock-Market Data Really Go Back 200 Years?
Wall Street Journal. July 11, 2009.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124725925791924871.html

© 2009 Michael Cale

July 9, 2009

Financial Crisis Set To End By 2011

A credit-market gauge favored by former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan showed the freeze that has gripped banks for the past two years will be all but over by mid-2011.
...the so-called Libor-OIS spread, fell to the lowest level in more than 17 months today. Contracts in the forward market show the gauge will drop to 25 basis points by June 2011, according to data compiled by Tullett Prebon Plc. Greenspan said a year ago he considered that level “normal.”

As of July 8, the spread was 32 basis points.

If this timeline is correct, let's hope the recession ends long before the financial crisis.

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Source:
Gavin Finch and Matthew Brown. Greenspan’s Libor Gauge Shows ‘Normal’ by 2011
Bloomberg. July 8, 2009.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aQ1jl.T2z2tQ


© 2009 Michael Cale

July 6, 2009

Yellen On the Fed's End Game

In a speech last week, San Francisco Fed President Janet Yellen outlines an escape plan for the Fed's current dilemma.

There are two direct threats to the Fed's current policies. One is that the Fed's radical increase in the monetary base will create inflation (see Flirting with Inflation and Laffer: Inflation Ahead ). This massive expansion in the base has largely been provided to the big banks, but the funds are still on deposit at the Fed, earning interest. The banks have not yet begun to move this money into the economy on a large scale.

The Fed's plan is to keep this money on deposit at the Fed by raising the interest rate paid on bank reserves. But this may raise interest rates throughout the economy.
An increase in the interest rate on reserves will induce banks to lend money to us rather than to other banks and borrowers, thereby pushing up the federal funds rate and other rates charged to private borrowers throughout the economy. The ability to pay interest on reserves is an important tool because, as I mentioned, it’s conceivable that, even if the economy rebounds nicely, the credit crunch might not be fully behind us and some financial markets might still need Fed support. This tool will enable us to tighten credit conditions even though our balance sheet wouldn’t shrink.1
The second threat is that government overspending will cause higher interest rates on government bonds (see Treasury Yields Headed Higher). Yellen doesn't directly address this issue. Instead, she argues that government deficits don't cause inflation, noting the example of Japan. But she does cite one historical example when deficits did lead to higher interest rates.
Consider the case of the large deficits in the United States in the 1980s. We did not see a run-up in inflation then. On the contrary, the deficits soared just as inflation was coming down. Those deficits did, however, contribute to higher interest rates, which made education and investment more expensive. 1
Whether they cause inflation, it seems either of these scenarios is likely to cause higher interest rates.

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At the time of publication Mr. Cale held long positions in TBT.

Source:

1. Janet Yellen. A View of the Economic Crisis and the Federal Reserve’s Response.
Speech to the Commonwealth Club of California
San Francisco, CA. June 30, 2009.
http://www.frbsf.org/news/speeches/2009/0630.html


© 2009 Michael Cale

July 5, 2009

The Unemployment Timebomb

The Telegraph's Ambrose Evans-Pritchard outlines what he calls the Unemployment Timebomb. There is a small army of unemployed worldwide, and it is growing rapidly. This may threaten the status quo in many nations.
Some of the US pay cuts are disguised. Over 238,000 state workers in California have been working two days less a month without pay since February. Variants of this are happening in 22 states.
The Centre for Labour Market Studies (CLMS) in Boston says US unemployment is now 18.2pc, counting the old-fashioned way. The reason why this does not "feel" like the 1930s is that we tend to compress the chronology of the Depression. It takes time for people to deplete their savings and sink into destitution. Perhaps our greater cushion of wealth today will prevent another Grapes of Wrath, but 20m US homeowners are already in negative equity (zillow.com data). Evictions are running at a terrifying pace. (emphasis added)

Europe is a year or so behind, but catching up fast. Unemployment has reached 18.7pc in Spain (37pc for youths), and 16.3pc in Latvia. Germany has delayed the cliff-edge effect by paying companies to keep furloughed workers...

We are moving into Phase II of the Great Unwinding. It may be time to put away our texts of Keynes, Friedman, and Fisher, so useful for Phase 1, and start studying what happened to society when global unemployment went haywire in 1932.


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Source:
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard. The unemployment timebomb is quietly ticking.
Telegraph. July 4, 2009.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/5742937/The-unemployment-timebomb-is-quietly-ticking.html


© 2009 Michael Cale

Ugly Employment Picture

Calculated Risk has posted a great chart that compares the jobs picture with previous recessions. It's ugly.


This recession appears to be on track for setting a new record for depth and duration.

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Source:

Calculated Risk. Employment Report: 467K Jobs Lost, 9.5% Unemployment Rate.
Calculated Risk. July 2, 2009.
http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2009/07/employment-report-467k-jobs-lost-95.html



© 2009 Michael Cale

July 4, 2009

Happy Independence Day

1776 was a roller coaster year for America.

The year started off with New Hampshire adopting the first state constitution (as opposed to a royal charter). Thomas Paine's Common Sense was published and quickly became a best seller. George Washington's Continental Army captures Boston; and a British attack on Charleston is defeated.

By summer, a large British fleet is threatening New York harbor and the Continental Congress adopts the Declaration of Independence. The delegation from New York state abstains.

For much of the rest of the year, things go poorly for the rebels. The British force lands in New York and soundly defeats Washington's forces and captures what is now New York City. Several battles extend the string of losses (including naval battles).

By the end of 1776, the future is dark. Washington's command is in doubt and morale is low. Thomas Paine again puts his pen to work and writes The Crisis - "these are the times that try men's souls".

A dangerous and desperate Christmas Day attack by Washington on Trenton, NJ helps to turn the tide and restore confidence in the cause of freedom.


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© 2009 Michael Cale

July 1, 2009

Back to the 1930's

Business Week recently ran a story that the decade-that-is-nearing-an-end is going to post a less-than-stellar stock market return.

From the close at the end of 1999 through Q2 of this year, the S&P 500 index has posted a return of -37%. The last time we posted a negative decade was the 1930's with a return of nearly minus 42%. 1 With only 6 months to go in the decade, it looks like it may be the first Lost Decade - American Style for the buy-and-hold crowd.



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Source:
1. David Henry. Stock Losses in Oughts as Bad as in 1930s Depression.
Business Week. June 22, 2009.
http://www.businessweek.com/investing/wall_street_news_blog/archives/2009/06/stock_market_ch.html


2. Jake. The Lost Decade.
EconompicData. June 23, 2009.
http://econompicdata.blogspot.com/2009/06/lost-decade.html



© 2009 Michael Cale